Sketch by Joan Robertson |
While I was away staying with my son Richard and his
wife Fiona and their family in Marondera, a country down about an hour’s drive
from my home in Harare ,
I received a phone call.
It was Sophie.
It was Sophie.
“Medem!” She said. “Andrew is dead!”
I know a few
Andrews and said in confusion, “Andrew?”
“Yes!” said Sophie. “Andrew – Dingaan’s brother,
Andrew!”
“Oh,” I said, “Andrew!” - and hope she did not hear the relief in my
voice when I realised it was not one of the Andrews I knew. How insensitive we
can be to other people’s pain.
“The police are there and then they are coming to take
Andrew to the morgue. We want to go and make a funeral,” she added.
“Go at once Sophie!” I said, “I’ll see you when I get
back next week.”
When I returned home come Tuesday, I found two very
sad helpers waiting for me - Sophie (a very large and majestic woman of 59) and
her thin dignified little husband of 82. In the cool quiet of the evening when
Sophie and I sat down together on the verandah for a chat I asked her to tell
me about the funeral.
“It was
horrible,” she said. “Horrible!”
Secret places
Andrew had lived in a room of a house he shared with
eight other tenants in a high density suburb of Harare . He was an asthmatic and had confided
in Dingaan that should he die, his money could be found in a secret place in
his room. The landlord had been given the key of the room “in case”.
When Sophie and Dingaan arrived they were shown into
Andrew’s room and Dingaan looked for the money, only to find that it had
disappeared.
....family and friends gathered ....by Pauline Battigelli |
They were then escorted to a large tree to greet
arriving family members and friends, who gathered and sat comfortably there.
They were also served lunch by the church ladies. “Andrew was a Roma,” said
Sophie.
Andrew’s three brothers went to visit the morgue and
were satisfied with the very smart coffin bought by his “medem”. She also
arranged a bus to collect the mourners and take them to the burial ground.
Funeral wait
The funeral took a long time. Evidently once the
coffin was placed in the ground, cement was packed around its sides.
“They put the cement around – and around – around -
and around – around,” Sophie paused as she recalled. “Then we had to wait for
it to dry.”
This took time of course. “Then they take corrugated
iron, put it on top and then more cement to cover,” said Sophie.
“Why do they do that?” I asked amazed.
"...we had to wait for it to dry" J.R. |
“That was a very smart coffin,” continued Sophie. It
had white curtains inside and a pillow - ‘medem’ had paid US$1,000 for it. They
say that when a coffin is smart like that people come at night, take up the
coffin and cut out the nice material.
When these proceedings were finally over the bus
returned the mourners to Andrew’s home and they all began to leave.
“That landlord,” said Sophie, “that man, he told us
the next day we had to clear Andrew’s room. He did not want to see anything.
Everything out! He wanted to let that room at once.”
“I went to sleep in a bed in Andrew’s room with a
sister and the men stayed outside to talk. The landlord, so fat, he wears
trousers low low at the back and when he bends down you can see half his
backside. I told Dingaan to say something to him but Dingaan said it was not
his business.”
Grass bed
When the talking of the men finished outside the
landlord stood up, went inside and locked the door of his house. “He left those
men outside and they had to sleep there on the grass,” she said. “That landlord
was Andrew’s friend. Andrew got him here from Malawi
and then that landlord made lots of money and bought a house. Now he’s got
money he’s dishonourable.”
Dingaan also got an upset stomach from the Roma food
or the bad water and on top of that, a bad cough.
Early next morning the landlord chided and chivvied
the family to hurry up and clear the room. The family shared out the belongings
and moved heavy furniture onto the grass where a brother who knew someone who
had a truck, would take it away.
A hungry, depressed group took their share of Andrew’s
belongings in their arms and sat outside. “Now we have all the stuff,” said
Sophie, “what do we do now? How can we carry it home?”
One woman had the idea that she could hire a trolley
for $1 from the local supermarket, so she went off to do just that. As the
others sat there in despair, a commuter bus passed by slowly and then stopped.
The driver jumped out and called to the group. “Can I help you?” They explained
that they had a very big problem and he said simply, “I will help you.”
Photo Cheryl Robertson |
Everyone bundled into the commuter bus and the driver
took them to their addresses and dropped each of them off right at their homes,
with all their katundu (baggage).
“That driver, he was a very, very good man,” Sophie
smiled. “For nothing he did that – not like the landlord.”
J.R.
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